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Our Opinion

The OnePlus 5T (6GB RAM, 64GB) is a much better phone, but the Huawei Honor 9i is significantly better value for money. Which phone should you buy? Probably the OnePlus 5T (6GB RAM, 64GB), if your budget allows for it.

The FullView bezel-less display looks gorgeous and makes for a good media consumption device

EMUI interface on top of Android works well, and is easy to use

Good, snappy speed/performance all-round

The major USP of the Honor 9i is of course the quad-camera setup, and it works well

The primary camera on the Honor 9i includes a 16-megapixel lens coupled with a 2-megapixel lens for depth effect and an LED flash - the image results are quite crisp and well balanced - there are also loads of filters and modes for users to choose from

Video recording also gives you an option to have bokeh effect frames for still shooting

Upfront the Honor 9i comes with another dual-camera setup - the Honor 9i carries a 13-megapixel and a 2-megapixel lens along with a selfie toning flash - the selfies come out well, including with the bokeh effect - comfortably one of the best selfie cams in this price bracket

Decent battery life - lasts the day with moderate use

On the whole, the Honor 9i has an edge above its top competitors like the Vivo V7+ and the LG Q6, in terms of the fact that it offers both a good-looking bezel-less display, but also a pretty good set of cameras (the cameras on LG Q6, and Vivo V7+ are less capable)

Top-notch build quality, minimalistic/elegant design, and even more premium looks now, with a modern 18:9 minimal-bezel display

Continues to have the very handy mute switch, in the tradition of earlier OnePlus phones

One of the new additions this time is Face Unlock - a la iPhone X - it works super fast (though not quite as reliably as the iPhone X), and is another area where OP went the extra mile to make one of Google's stock feature better - it's a useful, time-saving method to unlock your phone

The fingerprint reader, which used to be below the display, now sits on the back, below the camera - and it works well

Very good, and this time larger AMOLED display with great color rendition, and an excellent in-built Kindle-like "reading mode"

The larger display (6 inches instead of 5.5) is clearly the most envy-inciting difference between the OnePlus 5 and 5T, offering a better experience for watching videos and also simply a larger canvas to do the regular phone stuff too - and because the bezels are thinner, the 5T's physical size remains relatively the same - managing to fit in a 6-inch display within the dimensions of a one-handed phone

OxygenOS continues to be an excellent blend of stock Android and light but useful touches in all the right places - it is, without doubt, one of the best Android UIs around

There is also an option to make "parallel" apps on the phone if you have two different accounts for apps like Facebook, Instagram or Twitter

Performance is blazing fast all round, and same as OnePlus 5 - matching and sometimes even beating other Snapdragon 835 powerhouses like the Galaxy S8, Sony Xperia XZ Premium, and even the newer Pixel 2 XL

Very good dual camera setup, like the OnePlus 5 - overall it's pleasing color rendering and good dynamic range - the portrait mode is pretty nice too - on the whole the camera is fast and reliable

The one major change from the OnePlus 5 is that OnePlus swapped out the 20-megapixel telephoto lens on its dual camera, replacing it with a lens for low light - resulting in better low light pictures at the expense of optical zoom - which is a good trade-off because most users will prefer having better low-light capabilities at the end of the day, over optical zoom

Front facing camera is pretty good too, and so is 4K video recording (with good stabilisation)

Good loudspeaker - a bit richer and full-bodied compared to OnePlus 5

Very solid battery life - similar to the OnePlus 5 - will last the day easily

OnePlus's proprietary dash charging technology continues to provide industry leading fast charging speeds, and continues to work even when you are using your phone

On the whole, once again leaving aside the camera, which is good but not comparable to the best in business (Google Pixel 2), the OP5T matches other premium flagships in all other areas - and delivers this at a fraction of the price - continuing OnePlus's tradition of offering great performance at excellent value for money

And with improvements in some key areas (especially the screen and the looks), the OnePlus 5T also replaces its sibling as the new best phone to buy in this price range

2-minute Review [Negatives]

The back is quite prone to fingerprint smudges

Sunlight legibility of the display could have been better

Doesn't support fast charging

Uses the older microUSB standard instead of the modern USB-C standard

The phone still misses out on water and dust resistance, that is there in other (yes, more expensive) flagships

The phone's face unlock doesn't authorize payments like the iPhone X, and is not that consistent in challenging light

The phone's display is pretty good but doesn't pack the same punch as the (again, admittedly higher priced) premium Android flagships

The camera is also excellent for the price, and a little bit better than the OnePlus 5, but it is a notch below the level of the best Android camera phones like the Pixel 2 - the Pixel 2's camera outpaces the OnePlus 5T in clarity and focus, low-light (due to the camera's OIS/EIS setup), and portrait mode despite only having one lens - though of course the Pixel 2 is also much more expensive

If you already have a OnePlus 5, then the changes other than the screen are not that big, so you can easily skip the OnePlus 5T

Expert Reviews

If you prioritise looks over performance then the Honor 9i does offer more bang for the buck than other smartphones